Lady Cottington's Pressed Faery Book seems
to be the inspiration for this uproariously funny and often
deliciously tasteless book devoted to the true nature of smells and
stains. Apparently, smells and stains are living breathing creatures
worthy of our respect and our curiosity.

Running a Bed & Breakfast For Dummies is an
honest and comprehensive look at the world of running a bed and
breakfast inn. Mary White’s realistic perspective of inn-keeping is
eye-opening, yet optimistic and encouraging.

Most of us have
spent at least a little time considering the afterlife. Regardless of
your belief system, none of us really knows what we'll find after
death. According to Kelly Moran's fictional novella Idle Thursday,
we're mostly the same in death as we are in life.

Alan Gratz has done it again. Something Wicked, a
modern version of Shakespeare's Macbeth is a treasure. This companion
piece to Something Rotten (Hamlet) makes Shakespeare fun. This book
has it all -- mystery, murder, romance, a cool hero, and a sense of
humor. Gratz does a great job of drawing you into the story quickly,
keeping you entertained, your curiosity peeked, and occasionally,
making you laugh right out loud. Most importantly, Gratz doesn't
expose the murderer until the right time.

Rocky Smolin's From Program To Product
is a helpful guidebook for turning a custom computer application into
a marketable product. Smolin's advice will help you polish your
program into a professional and marketable product.

History worth telling usually tells itself.
Getzinger's Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire is a no-nonsense but
intense retelling of the tragedy. By quoting workers, witnesses, and
newspaper accounts, she lets the people who were there tell the
story. Author Donna Getzinger allows the event to speak for itself.